In short, I need new and exciting things to read. I'm working on improving my attention span so that is marginally more than it is now in the interest of taking 6 hour standardized test in July.

Post your recommended and favourite books here and discuss.

Recent/current reading material:Pale Fire, by Vladimir NabokovThe Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar WildeThe Book of Laughter and Forgetting, by Milan KunderaCarpe Jugulum, by Terry PratchettThe Prophet, by Kahlil Gibran

Favourite books:The Count of Monte Cristo, by Alexandre DumasA Clockwork Orange, by Anthony BurgessDune, by Frank HerbertCatcher in the Rye, by JD SalingerAmerican Gods, by Neil GaimanHitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series, by Douglas AdamsLord of the Rings trilogy, by JRR Tolkien

Damned fine books/plays/poems:1984, by George OrwellChoke, by Chuck PalahniukShogun, by James ClavellThe Awakening, by Kate ChopinHis Dark Materials series, by Philip PullmanRosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, by Tom StoppardTartuffe, by MoliereParadise Lost, by John Milton

Books about bunnies:Watership Down, by Richard Adams

Things that make good books:DepravityMadnessTurmoilHedonismIntrospectionBunnies

Currently, I'm liking The Picture of Dorian Gray the best. Well-executed ideas, but may not be for everyone.

My only actual novel reading (that isn't about a boy wizard) over the past several years has come from English class, and I'm sad to report that my favorite from all of them is something I read in French class my sophomore year of high school - Les Jeux Sont Faits, by Jean-Paul Sartre (I have seen this translated as both "The Die is Cast" and "The Chips are Down," neither of which are literal, but both of which get the point across). It's pretty short and I didn't understand about 20% of it, but it's got depravity/madness, turmoil, and introspection, for items on your list. It's also got a boatload of crazy philosophy that involves afterlife people walking around and watching other people play bridge. If you can read French or, more likely, if there's a decent translation of there, it might be worth your time if you like philosophical fiction.

SoxMike wrote:My only actual novel reading (that isn't about a boy wizard) over the past several years has come from English class, and I'm sad to report that my favorite from all of them is something I read in French class my sophomore year of high school - Les Jeux Sont Faits, by Jean-Paul Sartre (I have seen this translated as both "The Die is Cast" and "The Chips are Down," neither of which are literal, but both of which get the point across). It's pretty short and I didn't understand about 20% of it, but it's got depravity/madness, turmoil, and introspection, for items on your list. It's also got a boatload of crazy philosophy that involves afterlife people walking around and watching other people play bridge. If you can read French or, more likely, if there's a decent translation of there, it might be worth your time if you like philosophical fiction.

Otherwise... anything by Vonnegut, maybe?

Les Jeux Sont Faits sounds pretty awesome. If I can find it here (in English), I'll take a look at it. I think Sartre was an existentialist too? Pretty win.

I've already read a bunch of Vonnegut and like them all...Timequake, Slaughterhouse-5, Cat's Cradle. Anything in particular?

Epic fail! The English version of the book has been out of print for about 50 years now. Oh well.

The Vonnegut I read in high school (also sophomore year) was the less-known Mother Night, a presented as an autobiography of a fictional former American spy who had posed as a Nazi propagandist during WWII. It's pretty interesting, and also kind of sad and, occaisonally, littered with some offbeat/dark humor.

What else have I read... hmm....

If you liked 1984 (which I really want to read some time), you might check out something like Farenheit 451 (which I also want to read) because it's pretty similar thematically.

I also read this crazy book my freshman year of high school called A Confederacy of Dunces, which, if I had to describe it in a sentence, I'd say is about this really socially maladjusted man and his inadvertant quest to pretty much understand the point of basically everything. It's got a lot of really offbeat humor, including a series of chapters wherein the main character attempts to make sodomy the basis of a political party.

Adam got me hooked on a trilogy of trilogies last year by Robin Hobb that were quite good. The first set, the Farseer trilogy, has all that in your list and more (if you count "bunnies occasionally being eaten" as covered under "bunnies"). It also has some interesting magical concepts, all of which come with heavy prices, like a really unpleasant addiction or potential loss of humanity/sanity. If you can deal with the main character acting like the retarded teenager he is and screwing himself over with really, REALLY unpleasant consequences for a large chunk of the second book, give it a shot.

The other trilogies are equally good, although the second trilogy relates to the first and third in much that arc of Twelve Kingdoms we cut out of showing relates to the rest; it's got a different cast of main characters and is set in a different country, but what happens to one set of characters has repercussions in regards to the other.

If you like short stories, I'd recommend "The Paris Review Book for Planes, Trains, Elevators and Waiting Rooms." It has a variety of stories of differing lengths that, as the title suggests, are just right for different situations when you may be waiting a short or long while. I've already read a few stories from the collection, and they've all been great.